Miscontrusion

About a year ago, in a column titled, "What was that again?" I noted that
people who learn words solely from books are prey to pronouncing them the way
they look -- which, unfortunately, is not always the way they sound. Some linguist coined a term for it: “eggcorn,”
created when you substitute a word or phrase with words that sound similar.

No branch of the arts has littered the ground with more
eggcorns than rock lyrics, as we are reminded amusingly byKevin
J.H. Dettmar, chair of the English department at Pomona College.In
a recent blog post at the site of the Chronicle of Higher Education, Dettmar
asks

But how can rock really "rage against the machine" if no one’s quite
sure what it’s saying? What can it mean that a band that put a great deal of
emphasis on its songwriting—pop songs as political theory—actively resisted
making that theory more intelligible? Resisted to the degree that even smart
and sympathetic critics have sometimes badly misread the work?

One answer involves
taking the "mondegreen" seriously.

For better or worse, we seem to be stuck with the
term that was coined in 1954 by the writer Sylvia Wright, in a piece in
Harper’s Magazine. That the word is about the same age as rock and roll itself
is a fitting coincidence. In her mother’s recitation of the ballad "The
Bonnie Earl of Murray," Wright as a child misheard the phrase "laid
him on the green" as "Lady Mondegreen" and wove a coherent
narrative around the mistake, or "mondegreen."